/*
 * @(#)AppContext.java	1.35 06/10/10
 *
 * Copyright  1990-2008 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
 * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER
 * 
 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
 * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version
 * 2 only, as published by the Free Software Foundation. 
 * 
 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
 * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
 * General Public License version 2 for more details (a copy is
 * included at /legal/license.txt). 
 * 
 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 * version 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software
 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
 * 02110-1301 USA 
 * 
 * Please contact Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa
 * Clara, CA 95054 or visit www.sun.com if you need additional
 * information or have any questions. 
 */

package sun.awt;

import java.awt.AWTEvent;
import java.awt.EventQueue;
import java.awt.Frame;
import java.awt.Toolkit;
import java.awt.event.InvocationEvent;
import java.security.AccessController;
import java.security.PrivilegedAction;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.IdentityHashMap;
import java.util.Enumeration;

import java.beans.PropertyChangeSupport;
import java.beans.PropertyChangeListener;

/**
 * The AppContext is a table referenced by ThreadGroup which stores
 * application service instances.  (If you are not writing an application
 * service, or don't know what one is, please do not use this class.)
 * The AppContext allows applet access to what would otherwise be
 * potentially dangerous services, such as the ability to peek at
 * EventQueues or change the look-and-feel of a Swing application.<p>
 *
 * Most application services use a singleton object to provide their
 * services, either as a default (such as getSystemEventQueue or 
 * getDefaultToolkit) or as static methods with class data (System).
 * The AppContext works with the former method by extending the concept
 * of "default" to be ThreadGroup-specific.  Application services
 * lookup their singleton in the AppContext.<p>
 *
 * For example, here we have a Foo service, with its pre-AppContext
 * code:<p>
 * <code><pre>
 *    public class Foo {
 *        private static Foo defaultFoo = new Foo();
 *
 *        public static Foo getDefaultFoo() {
 *            return defaultFoo;
 *        }
 *
 *    ... Foo service methods
 *    }</pre></code><p>
 *
 * The problem with the above is that the Foo service is global in scope,
 * so that applets and other untrusted code can execute methods on the
 * single, shared Foo instance.  The Foo service therefore either needs
 * to block its use by untrusted code using a SecurityManager test, or
 * restrict its capabilities so that it doesn't matter if untrusted code
 * executes it.<p>
 *
 * Here's the Foo class written to use the AppContext:<p>
 * <code><pre>
 *    public class Foo {
 *        public static Foo getDefaultFoo() {
 *            Foo foo = (Foo)AppContext.getAppContext().get(Foo.class);
 *            if (foo == null) {
 *                foo = new Foo();
 *                getAppContext().put(Foo.class, foo);
 *            }
 *            return foo;
 *        }
 *
 *    ... Foo service methods
 *    }</pre></code><p>
 *
 * Since a separate AppContext can exist for each ThreadGroup, trusted
 * and untrusted code have access to different Foo instances.  This allows
 * untrusted code access to "system-wide" services -- the service remains
 * within the AppContext "sandbox".  For example, say a malicious applet 
 * wants to peek all of the key events on the EventQueue to listen for
 * passwords; if separate EventQueues are used for each ThreadGroup
 * using AppContexts, the only key events that applet will be able to
 * listen to are its own.  A more reasonable applet request would be to
 * change the Swing default look-and-feel; with that default stored in
 * an AppContext, the applet's look-and-feel will change without 
 * disrupting other applets or potentially the browser itself.<p>
 *
 * Because the AppContext is a facility for safely extending application
 * service support to applets, none of its methods may be blocked by a
 * a SecurityManager check in a valid Java implementation.  Applets may
 * therefore safely invoke any of its methods without worry of being 
 * blocked.
 *
 * Note: If a SecurityManager is installed which derives from
 * sun.awt.AWTSecurityManager, it may override the
 * AWTSecurityManager.getAppContext() method to return the proper
 * AppContext based on the execution context, in the case where
 * the default ThreadGroup-based AppContext indexing would return
 * the main "system" AppContext.  For example, in an applet situation,
 * if a system thread calls into an applet, rather than returning the
 * main "system" AppContext (the one corresponding to the system thread),
 * an installed AWTSecurityManager may return the applet's AppContext
 * based on the execution context.
 *
 * @author  Thomas Ball
 * @author  Fred Ecks
 * @version 1.35 10/10/06
 */
public final class AppContext {

    /* Since the contents of an AppContext are unique to each Java 
     * session, this class should never be serialized. */

    /* The key to put()/get() the Java EventQueue into/from the AppContext.
     */
    public static final Object EVENT_QUEUE_KEY = new StringBuffer("EventQueue");

    /* A map of AppContexts, referenced by ThreadGroup.
     */
    private static IdentityHashMap threadGroup2appContext = null;

    /* The main "system" AppContext, used by everything not otherwise
       contained in another AppContext.
     */
    private static AppContext mainAppContext = null;

    /*
     * The hash map associated with this AppContext.  A private delegate
     * is used instead of subclassing HashMap so as to avoid all of
     * HashMap's potentially risky methods, such as clear(), elements(),
     * putAll(), etc.
     */
    private final HashMap table = new HashMap();

    private final ThreadGroup threadGroup;

    /**
     * If any <code>PropertyChangeListeners</code> have been registered,
     * the <code>changeSupport</code> field describes them.
     *
     * @see #addPropertyChangeListener
     * @see #removePropertyChangeListener
     * @see #firePropertyChange
     *
     * private PropertyChangeSupport changeSupport = null;
     */

    public static final String DISPOSED_PROPERTY_NAME = "disposed";

    private boolean isDisposed = false; // true if AppContext is disposed

    public boolean isDisposed() {
        return isDisposed;
    }


    static {
        // On the main Thread, we get the ThreadGroup, make a corresponding
        // AppContext, and instantiate the Java EventQueue.  This way, legacy
        // code is unaffected by the move to multiple AppContext ability.
        AccessController.doPrivileged(new PrivilegedAction() {
          public Object run() {
            ThreadGroup currentThreadGroup =
                                Thread.currentThread().getThreadGroup();
            ThreadGroup parentThreadGroup = currentThreadGroup.getParent();
            while (parentThreadGroup != null) {
                // Find the root ThreadGroup to construct our main AppContext
                currentThreadGroup = parentThreadGroup;
                parentThreadGroup = currentThreadGroup.getParent();
            }
            mainAppContext = new AppContext(currentThreadGroup);
            numAppContexts = 1;
            return mainAppContext;
          }
        });
    }

    /*
     * The total number of AppContexts, system-wide.  This number is
     * incremented at the beginning of the constructor, and decremented
     * at the end of dispose().  getAppContext() checks to see if this
     * number is 1.  If so, it returns the sole AppContext without
     * checking Thread.currentThread().
     */
    private static int numAppContexts;

    /*
     * The context ClassLoader that was used to create this AppContext.
     */
    private final ClassLoader contextClassLoader;

    /**
     * Constructor for AppContext.  This method is <i>not</i> public,
     * nor should it ever be used as such.  The proper way to construct
     * an AppContext is through the use of SunToolkit.createNewAppContext.
     * A ThreadGroup is created for the new AppContext, a Thread is
     * created within that ThreadGroup, and that Thread calls
     * SunToolkit.createNewAppContext before calling anything else.
     * That creates both the new AppContext and its EventQueue.
     * 
     * @param   threadGroup     The ThreadGroup for the new AppContext
     * @see     sun.awt.SunToolkit
     * @since   JDK1.2
     */
    AppContext(ThreadGroup threadGroup) {
        numAppContexts++;

        if (threadGroup2appContext == null) {
            threadGroup2appContext = new IdentityHashMap();
        }
        this.threadGroup = threadGroup;
        threadGroup2appContext.put(threadGroup, this);

        this.contextClassLoader = 
            (ClassLoader) AccessController.doPrivileged(new PrivilegedAction() {
                    public Object run() {
                        return Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
                    }
                });
    }

    private static MostRecentThreadAppContext mostRecentThreadAppContext = null;

    /**
     * Returns the appropriate AppContext for the caller, 
     * as determined by its ThreadGroup.  If the main "system" AppContext
     * would be returned and there's an AWTSecurityManager installed, it
     * is called to get the proper AppContext based on the execution
     * context.
     *
     * @return  the AppContext for the caller.
     * @see     java.lang.ThreadGroup
     * @since   JDK1.2
     */
    public final static AppContext getAppContext() {
        if (numAppContexts == 1)   // If there's only one system-wide,
            return mainAppContext; // return the main system AppContext.

        final Thread currentThread = Thread.currentThread();

        AppContext appContext = null;

        // Note: this most recent Thread/AppContext caching is thread-hot.
        // A simple test using SwingSet found that 96.8% of lookups
        // were matched using the most recent Thread/AppContext.  By
        // instantiating a simple MostRecentThreadAppContext object on
        // cache misses, the cache hits can be processed without
        // synchronization.

        MostRecentThreadAppContext recent = mostRecentThreadAppContext;
        if ((recent != null) && (recent.thread == currentThread))  {
            appContext = recent.appContext; // Cache hit
        } else {
          appContext = (AppContext)AccessController.doPrivileged(
                                            new PrivilegedAction() {
            public Object run() {
            // Get the current ThreadGroup, and look for it and its
            // parents in the hash from ThreadGroup to AppContext --
            // it should be found, because we use createNewContext()
            // when new AppContext objects are created.
            ThreadGroup currentThreadGroup = currentThread.getThreadGroup();
            ThreadGroup threadGroup = currentThreadGroup;
            AppContext context =
                          (AppContext)threadGroup2appContext.get(threadGroup);
            while (context == null) {
                threadGroup = threadGroup.getParent();
                if (threadGroup == null) {
                    // If we get here, we're running under a ThreadGroup that
                    // has no AppContext associated with it.  This should never
                    // happen, because createNewContext() should be used by the
                    // toolkit to create the ThreadGroup that everything runs
                    // under.
                    throw new RuntimeException("Invalid ThreadGroup");
                }
                context = (AppContext)threadGroup2appContext.get(threadGroup);
            }
            // In case we did anything in the above while loop, we add
            // all the intermediate ThreadGroups to threadGroup2appContext
            // so we won't spin again.
            for (ThreadGroup tg = currentThreadGroup; tg != threadGroup; tg = tg.getParent()) {
                threadGroup2appContext.put(tg, context);
            }
            // Now we're done, so we cache the latest key/value pair.
            // (we do this before checking with any AWTSecurityManager, so if
            // this Thread equates with the main AppContext in the cache, it
            // still will)
            mostRecentThreadAppContext =
                new MostRecentThreadAppContext(currentThread, context);

            return context;
          }
         });
        }

        if (appContext == mainAppContext)  {
            // Before we return the main "system" AppContext, check to
            // see if there's an AWTSecurityManager installed.  If so,
            // allow it to choose the AppContext to return.
            SecurityManager securityManager = System.getSecurityManager();
            if ((securityManager != null) &&
                (securityManager instanceof AWTSecurityManager))  {
                AWTSecurityManager awtSecMgr =
                                      (AWTSecurityManager)securityManager;
                AppContext secAppContext = awtSecMgr.getAppContext();
                if (secAppContext != null)  {
                    appContext = secAppContext; // Return what we're told
                }
            }
        }

        return appContext;
    }

    private long DISPOSAL_TIMEOUT = 5000;  // Default to 5-second timeout
                                           // for disposal of all Frames
                                           // (we wait for this time twice,
                                           // once for dispose(), and once
                                           // to clear the EventQueue).

    private long THREAD_INTERRUPT_TIMEOUT = 1000;
                            // Default to 1-second timeout for all
                            // interrupted Threads to exit, and another
                            // 1 second for all stopped Threads to die.

    /**
     * Disposes of this AppContext, all of its top-level Frames, and
     * all Threads and ThreadGroups contained within it.
     * 
     * This method must be called from a Thread which is not contained
     * within this AppContext.
     *
     * @exception  IllegalThreadStateException  if the current thread is
     *                                    contained within this AppContext
     * @since      JDK1.2
     */
    public void dispose() throws IllegalThreadStateException {
        // Check to be sure that the current Thread isn't in this AppContext
        if (this.threadGroup.parentOf(Thread.currentThread().getThreadGroup())) {
            throw new IllegalThreadStateException(
                "Current Thread is contained within AppContext to be disposed."
              );
        }

        synchronized(this) {
            if (this.isDisposed) {
                return; // If already disposed, bail.
            }
            this.isDisposed = true;
        }

        //final PropertyChangeSupport changeSupport = this.changeSupport;
        //if (changeSupport != null) {
        //    changeSupport.firePropertyChange(DISPOSED_PROPERTY_NAME, false, true);
        //}

        // First, we post an InvocationEvent to be run on the
        // EventDispatchThread which disposes of all top-level Frames

        final Object notificationLock = new Object();

        /*no mutiple frames in basis 
        * Runnable runnable = new Runnable() { public void run() {
        *     Frame [] frames = Frame.getFrames();
        *     for (int i = frames.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
        *         frames[i].dispose(); // Dispose of all top-level Frames
        *     }
        *     synchronized(notificationLock) {
        *         notificationLock.notifyAll(); // Notify caller that we're done
        *     }
        * } };
        * synchronized(notificationLock) {
        *     SunToolkit.postEvent(this,
        *         new InvocationEvent(Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit(), runnable));
        *     try {
        *         notificationLock.wait(DISPOSAL_TIMEOUT);
        *     } catch (InterruptedException e) { }
        *  }
        */

        // Next, we post another InvocationEvent to the end of the
        // EventQueue.  When it's executed, we know we've executed all
        // events in the queue.

        Runnable runnable = new Runnable() { public void run() {
            synchronized(notificationLock) {
                notificationLock.notifyAll(); // Notify caller that we're done
            }
        } };
        synchronized(notificationLock) {
            SunToolkit.postEvent(this,
                new InvocationEvent(Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit(), runnable));
            try {
                notificationLock.wait(DISPOSAL_TIMEOUT);
            } catch (InterruptedException e) { }
        }

        // Next, we interrupt all Threads in the ThreadGroup
        this.threadGroup.interrupt();
            // Note, the EventDispatchThread we've interrupted may dump an
            // InterruptedException to the console here.  This needs to be
            // fixed in the EventDispatchThread, not here.

        // Next, we sleep 10ms at a time, waiting for all of the active
        // Threads in the ThreadGroup to exit.

        long startTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
        long endTime = startTime + (long)THREAD_INTERRUPT_TIMEOUT;
        while ((this.threadGroup.activeCount() > 0) &&
               (System.currentTimeMillis() < endTime)) {
            try {
                Thread.sleep(10);
            } catch (InterruptedException e) { }
        }

        // Then, we stop any remaining Threads
        // this.threadGroup.stop();

        // Next, we sleep 10ms at a time, waiting for all of the active
        // Threads in the ThreadGroup to die.

        startTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
        endTime = startTime + (long)THREAD_INTERRUPT_TIMEOUT;
        while ((this.threadGroup.activeCount() > 0) &&
               (System.currentTimeMillis() < endTime)) {
            try {
                Thread.sleep(10);
            } catch (InterruptedException e) { }
        }

        // Next, we remove this and all subThreadGroups from threadGroup2appContext
        int numSubGroups = this.threadGroup.activeGroupCount();
        if (numSubGroups > 0) {
            ThreadGroup [] subGroups = new ThreadGroup[numSubGroups];
            numSubGroups = this.threadGroup.enumerate(subGroups);
            for (int subGroup = 0; subGroup < numSubGroups; subGroup++) {
                threadGroup2appContext.remove(subGroups[subGroup]);
            }
        }
	threadGroup2appContext.remove(this.threadGroup);

        MostRecentThreadAppContext recent = mostRecentThreadAppContext;
        if ((recent != null) && (recent.appContext == this))
            mostRecentThreadAppContext = null;
                // If the "most recent" points to this, clear it for GC

        // Finally, we destroy the ThreadGroup entirely.
        try {
            this.threadGroup.destroy();
        } catch (IllegalThreadStateException e) {
            // Fired if not all the Threads died, ignore it and proceed
        }

        synchronized (table) {
            this.table.clear(); // Clear out the Hashtable to ease garbage collection
        }

        numAppContexts--;

        mostRecentKeyValue = null;
    }

/*   There is no AWTAutoShutdown in pbp right now
*
*    static final class PostShutdownEventRunnable implements Runnable {
*        private final AppContext appContext;
*
*        public PostShutdownEventRunnable(AppContext ac) {
*            appContext = ac;
*        }
*        
*        public void run() {
*            final EventQueue eq = (EventQueue)appContext.get(EVENT_QUEUE_KEY);
*            if (eq != null) {
*                eq.postEvent(AWTAutoShutdown.getShutdownEvent());
*            }
*        }
*    }
*
*
*    static final class CreateThreadAction implements PrivilegedAction {
*        private final AppContext appContext;
*        private final Runnable runnable;
*
*        public CreateThreadAction(AppContext ac, Runnable r) {
*            appContext = ac;
*            runnable = r;
*        }
*        
*        public Object run() {
*            Thread t = new Thread(appContext.getThreadGroup(), runnable);
*            t.setContextClassLoader(appContext.getContextClassLoader());
*            t.setPriority(Thread.NORM_PRIORITY + 1);
*            t.setDaemon(true);
*            return t;
*        }
*    }
*
*
*    static void stopEventDispatchThreads() {
*
*        // Use clone, so that concurrent modification of threadGroup2appContext 
*
*        // won't mess up the enumeration.
*
*        Hashtable clone = (Hashtable)threadGroup2appContext.clone();
*        Enumeration allAppContexts = clone.elements();
*
*        while (allAppContexts.hasMoreElements()) {
*            AppContext appContext = (AppContext)allAppContexts.nextElement();
*
*            Runnable r = new PostShutdownEventRunnable(appContext);
*            // For security reasons EventQueue.postEvent should only be called
*            // on a thread that belongs to the corresponding thread group.
*            if (appContext != AppContext.getAppContext()) {
*                // Create a thread that belongs to the thread group associated
*                // with the AppContext and invokes EventQueue.postEvent.
*                PrivilegedAction action = new CreateThreadAction(appContext, r);
*                Thread thread = (Thread)AccessController.doPrivileged(action);
*                thread.start();
*            } else {
*                r.run();
*            }
*        }
*    }
*/
    private MostRecentKeyValue mostRecentKeyValue = null;

    /**
     * Returns the value to which the specified key is mapped in this context.
     *
     * @param   key   a key in the AppContext.
     * @return  the value to which the key is mapped in this AppContext;
     *          <code>null</code> if the key is not mapped to any value.
     * @see     #put(Object, Object)
     * @since   JDK1.2
     */
    public Object get(Object key) {
        // Note: this most recent key/value caching is thread-hot.
        // A simple test using SwingSet found that 72% of lookups
        // were matched using the most recent key/value.  By instantiating
        // a simple MostRecentKeyValue object on cache misses, the
        // cache hits can be processed without synchronization.

        MostRecentKeyValue recent = mostRecentKeyValue;
        if ((recent != null) && (recent.key == key)) {
            return recent.value;
        }

        /*
         * The most recent reference should be updated inside a synchronized
         * block to avoid a race when put() and get() are executed in
         * parallel on different threads.
         */
        synchronized (table) {
            Object value = table.get(key);
            mostRecentKeyValue = new MostRecentKeyValue(key, value);
            return value;
        }
    }

    /**
     * Maps the specified <code>key</code> to the specified 
     * <code>value</code> in this AppContext.  Neither the key nor the 
     * value can be <code>null</code>.
     * <p>
     * The value can be retrieved by calling the <code>get</code> method 
     * with a key that is equal to the original key. 
     *
     * @param      key     the AppContext key.
     * @param      value   the value.
     * @return     the previous value of the specified key in this 
     *             AppContext, or <code>null</code> if it did not have one.
     * @exception  NullPointerException  if the key or value is
     *               <code>null</code>.
     * @see     #get(Object)
     * @since   JDK1.2
     */
    public Object put(Object key, Object value) {
        synchronized (table) {
            MostRecentKeyValue recent = mostRecentKeyValue;
            if ((recent != null) && (recent.key == key))
                recent.value = value;
            return table.put(key, value);
        }
    }

    /**
     * Removes the key (and its corresponding value) from this 
     * AppContext. This method does nothing if the key is not in the
     * AppContext.
     *
     * @param   key   the key that needs to be removed.
     * @return  the value to which the key had been mapped in this AppContext,
     *          or <code>null</code> if the key did not have a mapping.
     * @since   JDK1.2
     */
    public Object remove(Object key) {
        synchronized (table) {
            MostRecentKeyValue recent = mostRecentKeyValue;
            if ((recent != null) && (recent.key == key))
                recent.value = null;
            return table.remove(key);
        }
    }

    /**
     * Returns the root ThreadGroup for all Threads contained within
     * this AppContext.
     * @since   JDK1.2
     */
    public ThreadGroup getThreadGroup() {
        return threadGroup;
    }

    /**
     * Returns the context ClassLoader that was used to create this
     * AppContext.
     *
     * @see java.lang.Thread#getContextClassLoader
     */
    public ClassLoader getContextClassLoader() {
        return contextClassLoader;
    }

    /**
     * Returns a string representation of this AppContext.
     * @since   JDK1.2
     */
    public String toString() {
        return getClass().getName() + "[threadGroup=" + threadGroup.getName() + "]";
    }

    /**
     * Returns an array of all the property change listeners
     * registered on this component.
     *
     * @return all of this component's <code>PropertyChangeListener</code>s
     *         or an empty array if no property change
     *         listeners are currently registered
     *
     * @see      #addPropertyChangeListener
     * @see      #removePropertyChangeListener
     * @see      #getPropertyChangeListeners(java.lang.String)
     * @see      java.beans.PropertyChangeSupport#getPropertyChangeListeners
     * @since    1.4
    * public synchronized PropertyChangeListener[] getPropertyChangeListeners() {
    *     if (changeSupport == null) {
    *         return new PropertyChangeListener[0];
    *     }
    *     return changeSupport.getPropertyChangeListeners();
    * }
     */
  
    /**
     * Adds a PropertyChangeListener to the listener list for a specific
     * property. The specified property may be one of the following:
     * <ul>
     *    <li>if this AppContext is disposed ("disposed")</li>
     * </ul>
     * <p>
     * If listener is null, no exception is thrown and no action is performed.
     *
     * @param propertyName one of the property names listed above
     * @param listener the PropertyChangeListener to be added
     *
     * @see #removePropertyChangeListener(java.lang.String, java.beans.PropertyChangeListener)
     * @see #getPropertyChangeListeners(java.lang.String)
     * @see #addPropertyChangeListener(java.lang.String, java.beans.PropertyChangeListener)
    * public synchronized void addPropertyChangeListener(
    *                          String propertyName,
    *                          PropertyChangeListener listener) {
*	if (listener == null) {
*	    return;
*	}
*	if (changeSupport == null) {
*	    changeSupport = new PropertyChangeSupport(this);
*	}
*	changeSupport.addPropertyChangeListener(propertyName, listener);
    *}
     */

    /**
     * Removes a PropertyChangeListener from the listener list for a specific
     * property. This method should be used to remove PropertyChangeListeners
     * that were registered for a specific bound property.
     * <p>
     * If listener is null, no exception is thrown and no action is performed.
     *
     * @param propertyName a valid property name
     * @param listener the PropertyChangeListener to be removed
     *
     * @see #addPropertyChangeListener(java.lang.String, java.beans.PropertyChangeListener)
     * @see #getPropertyChangeListeners(java.lang.String)
     * @see #removePropertyChangeListener(java.beans.PropertyChangeListener)
    *public synchronized void removePropertyChangeListener(
    *                         String propertyName,
    *                         PropertyChangeListener listener) {
    *    if (listener == null || changeSupport == null) {
    *        return;
    *    }
    *    changeSupport.removePropertyChangeListener(propertyName, listener);
    *}
     */

    /**
     * Returns an array of all the listeners which have been associated 
     * with the named property.
     *
     * @return all of the <code>PropertyChangeListeners</code> associated with
     *         the named property or an empty array if no listeners have 
     *         been added
     *
     * @see #addPropertyChangeListener(java.lang.String, java.beans.PropertyChangeListener)
     * @see #removePropertyChangeListener(java.lang.String, java.beans.PropertyChangeListener)
     * @see #getPropertyChangeListeners
     * @since 1.4
    *public synchronized PropertyChangeListener[] getPropertyChangeListeners(
     *                                                   String propertyName) {
    *    if (changeSupport == null) {
    *        return new PropertyChangeListener[0];
    *    }
    *    return changeSupport.getPropertyChangeListeners(propertyName);
    *}
     */
}

final class MostRecentThreadAppContext {
    final Thread thread;
    final AppContext appContext;
    MostRecentThreadAppContext(Thread key, AppContext value) {
        thread = key;
        appContext = value;
    }
}

final class MostRecentKeyValue {
    final Object key;
    Object value;
    MostRecentKeyValue(Object k, Object v) {
        key = k;
        value = v;
    }
}
